Junctional and somatic hypermutation-induced CX4C motif is critical for the recognition of a highly conserved epitope on HCV E2 by a human broadly neutralizing antibody.
Chunyan YiJing XiaLan HeZhiyang LingXuesong WangYu YanJiangjun WangXinhao ZhaoWeiguo FanXiaoyu SunRonghua ZhangSheng YeRongguang ZhangYongfen XuLiyan MaYaguang ZhangHonglin ZhouZhong HuangJunqi NiuGang LongJunxia LuJin ZhongBing SunPublished in: Cellular & molecular immunology (2020)
Induction of broadly neutralizing monoclonal antibodies (bNAbs) that bind to the viral envelope glycoproteins is a major goal of hepatitis C virus (HCV) vaccine research. The study of bNAbs arising in natural infection is essential in this endeavor. We generated a human antibody, 8D6, recognizing the E2 protein of HCV isolated from a chronic hepatitis C patient. This antibody shows broadly neutralizing activity, which covers a pan-genotypic panel of cell culture-derived HCV virions (HCVcc). Functional and epitope analyses demonstrated that 8D6 can block the interaction between E2 and CD81 by targeting a highly conserved epitope on E2. We describe how the 8D6 lineage evolved via somatic hypermutation to achieve broad neutralization. We found that the V(D)J recombination-generated junctional and somatic hypermutation-induced disulfide bridge (C-C) motif in the CDRH3 is critical for the broad neutralization and binding activity of 8D6. This motif is conserved among a series of broadly neutralizing HCV antibodies, indicating a common binding model. Next, the 8D6 inferred germline (iGL) was reconstructed and tested for its binding affinity and neutralization activity. Interestingly, 8D6 iGL-mediated relatively strong inhibition of the 1b genotype PR79L9 strain, suggesting that PR79L9 may serve as a potential natural viral strain that provides E2 sequences that induce bNAbs. Overall, our detailed epitope mapping and genetic studies of the HCV E2-specific mAb 8D6 have allowed for further refinement of antigenic sites on E2 and reveal a new mechanism to generate a functional CDRH3, while its iGL can serve as a probe to identify potential HCV vaccine strains.
Keyphrases
- hepatitis c virus
- human immunodeficiency virus
- endothelial cells
- monoclonal antibody
- dengue virus
- transcription factor
- sars cov
- high glucose
- copy number
- dna damage
- dna repair
- escherichia coli
- dna binding
- gene expression
- risk assessment
- diabetic rats
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- quantum dots
- zika virus
- living cells
- liver fibrosis
- rare case
- protein protein
- antiretroviral therapy
- single molecule